There’s more to late-game rotations than just offense/defense substitutions.
In those moments you have to trust your guy to execute the details. Can he get open against denial? Can he meet the pass instead of waiting on it? Can he chin it, pivot through pressure, and make the right read without panicking? Late game is about ball security and poise just as much as shot making. If you don’t trust a player to get open, get secure the ball, and get fouled, you’re shrinking your own options.
There’s also a culture component. When players see that strong practice habits and two-way consistency translate to real minutes, especially in leverage situations, that matters. The message can’t just be “produce offensively.” It has to be “defend, value the ball, execute, and you’ll be trusted.” That carries into the offseason.
This group has real work ahead. If you want internal development to close the gap in the Big Ten, guys have to believe there’s a pathway. Late game trust isn’t just about that possession. It’s about setting a standard for what earns the floor.
The win is what matters and they got it.